Hi again,
On Sat, 18 Jul 2009 15:13:12 +0200
Marek Kubica <marek at xivilization.net> wrote:
> - The context menu only stays open as long as the right mouse button
> is pressed. I know that this has been the historical Unix way of doing
> things, but nowadays many toolkits (Windows, GTK+, AFAIR Qt too) leave
> the menu open until the user does a (left or middle or right) click
> outside of the menu. In my option this is the better way, since it can
> be tricky to click right and move the mouse, especially on a touchpad
> and when every other application leaves the context menu open.
>> - Search in Helpdesk for "(selection)" in the context menu. This
> option is incredibly useful, but when I select a large amount of
> text, the whole 'Search in Helpdesk for "large amount of text"' makes
> the menu very, very large. I think it would be better to shorten it
> to the first selected form and add "..." to it. The user will know
> that there is some more text while not blowing up the sice of the
> menu.
>> - When running the debugger, I can't make the left part
> (Stack/Variables) wider. This would be handy because the variables
> that I define sometimes have a large text representation and the
> frequent line breaks and scrolling in the variables window could be
> reduced if I could make it larger by making the definitions and REPL
> parts smaller.
>> It would be great if someone could look into this, since DrScheme,
> erm, MrEd is a really good way to program in Scheme except for the
> historical usability weaknesses (some of these were already adressed -
> many thanks for that, this made my MrEd experience a lot more pleasant
> already).
I found another one: when editing stuff in the REPL, I am often "done"
and want to execute the expression. Unsurprisingly pressing [Enter]
in the middle does not work as it inserts a newline. I have to go back
to the end of the expression to execute it.
Would it be possible to add, uhm Ctrl+Enter to evaluate the current
expression directly, without the need to go to the end of the line?
regards,
Marek